Important Disclosure: WoW is a secondary market reseller & isn’t the primary provider of the tickets. More
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Important Disclosure: WoW is a secondary market reseller & isn’t the primary provider of the tickets. Final ticket prices are higher than their face value & fluctuate according to supply & demand. WoW is solely a marketplace in which sellers can sell their tickets & buyers can buy tickets to access high demand events & while doing so, we aim to provide a reliable service, offer fair prices and friendly customer support.

Important Disclosure: WoW is a secondary market reseller & isn’t the primary provider of the tickets. Final ticket prices are higher than their face value & fluctuate according to supply & demand. WoW is solely a marketplace in which sellers can sell their tickets & buyers can buy tickets to access high demand events & while doing so, we aim to provide a reliable service, offer fair prices and friendly customer support.

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Stoke City Tickets

When the first strains of “Delilah” fill the air, the Bet365 Stadium (aka Britannia Stadium) comes to life. A ferocious rendition of Tom Jones’ classic takes on a meaning that only Stoke City fans can give them. It’s a wall of passion which begins the intimidating atmosphere for the visitors; the Potters has seen some of the best teams in the country wilt and many more will in the future. Stoke City is a club steeped in history. The second oldest in the world, it has seen some of the finest English players grace the red and white striped shirt. Gordon Banks, Peter Shilton, Stanley Matthews. Sir Stan; the oldest man to play a game in English football; revered; respected; Stoke. The Potters; forever the bridesmaid, never the bride. It breeds a special belief in the team; just once, it might be Stoke’s year. 2010 – 11 nearly was; but for Yaya Toure’s goal, it might have been the FA Cup. Firmly entrenched in the Premier League, Mark Hughes has kept Tony Pulis’ battling spirit but added a little flair and the stands of the Bet365 respond in kind. Get there for a home match against Arsenal and feel the atmosphere sparkle with antagonism between London and the East Midlands. There a special friction when Arsene Wenger’s team takes the field. They’ve lost so many key battles at a ground inspired by that glorious moments. It’s a never to be forgotten occasion in English football. And when the football’s over,...

All Dates

All Games

Stoke City Fixtures

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Honours

Football League Division Two (now League One) (3)

1932 – 33, 1962 – 63, 1992 - 93

Football League Division Three North (now League Two) (1)

1926 – 27

Football League Cup (1):

1971 – 72 vs. Chelsea, 2 – 1

Leading Goalscorer

John Ritchie: 176 Goals

Like Matthews, Ritchie had two spells with Stoke. His was either side of three years at Sheffield Wednesday. After signing from Kettering, he scored 81 goals in 135 appearances at the Victoria Ground from 1963 through 1966.

Tony Waddington, then-manager of Stoke, bought Ritchie without seeing him play and surprised the player and football, by selling him to Sheffield Wednesday for £80,000 in November 1966. It was, Waddington conceded soon after, a mistake. Ritchie scored at just under a goal every other game at Hillsborough but in 1969, returned to Stoke.

Between then and 1974, Ritchie scored another 95 goals in 216 appearances, bringing his total to 176 goals for the club in 351 appearances. His career ended when he suffered a broken leg in September 1974, and a double leg fracture in 1975.

Ritchie died in February 2007.

Greatest Moment

4th March 1972, Wembley Stadium. Back in the day, Stoke City had a decent side. Liverpool, Arsenal, Leeds; they were the big names of English football but the Potters could match them anyway they chose to.

Chelsea were favourites to win the match, having won the FA Cup two years previous, as well as the 1971 European Cup Winners Cup. The Blues played with swagger and style, with the panache that the Kings Road expected.

City had other ideas. Terry Conroy gave them a fifth-minute lead and Chelsea only recovered their poise when Peter Osgood equalised on the stroke of half-time. Stoke, beaten by Arsenal in the 1971 FA Cup semi-final made the most of their appearance at Wembley with George Eastham scoring the winner to secure the club’s only major honour to date.

Buying Stoke City match tickets

Follow these steps to complete your purchase of Stoke City tickets:

Select your Stoke fixtures from our events table above or our match menu. You can buy the Potters home tickets or Stoke City away tickets.

On the Stoke City events page, locate the seating section you want and click ‘Buy ticket’

On the checkout page, please login with your user information or select checkout as a guest and fill in your personal information then press ‘Next’.

In the ‘review your order’ page you will be able to review Stoke City tickets that you have ordered and the total price you will be paying in the next stage if you have been given a coupon or discount code, enter this in the box and click “apply”. The final Stoke ticket prices will be calculated and then click “Proceed to payment”. There are no hidden fees or costs and the total price you see is what you will pay for Stoke City tickets.

After clicking “Proceed to payment” you will be redirected to our highly secure payment page where you should enter your payment details and process the payment.

After payment is successfully processed you will be redirected back to our site and you will receive a confirmation message. An email with your STOKE tickets order details will be sent to the email address you have provided during your registration.